Posts

SIGNAL ACQUISITION REPORT

 Target acquired: Gary Marcus Confidence: late Radar delay: ~72hrs Affiliation NYU, cognitive science Platform The Weekly Show w/ Jon Stewart Topic AI industry maturity / risk Searchability Near zero — spoken only, not transcribed Signal Content “Worst moment in AI history, maybe. We have the weakest guardrails right now, we have the weakest understanding of what they do, and yet so much enthusiasm — there is widespread adoption. Little bit like the early days of airplanes. The worst day to be on an intercontinental plane would have been the first day.” Acquisition Log Initial query: “Origins of Thought” podcast — no match found Guessed Thiel / Andreessen — wrong worldview, embarrassing Searched “worst time intercontinental flight industry analogy” — nothing Operator confirmed: Ben McKenzie, Daily Show — partial hit Operator confirmed: John Oliver AI episode — adjacent, not source Operator named Gary Marcus, NYU — target identified by human Target confirmed: Jon Stewart show, spoke...

Still Sulfuree

 Ponce de Leon thinks he found the fountain of youth. Was it all hype? I don't know, I had a drink in 1991. Still feeling pretty good. Sulfuree — that mineral hit at the back of the throat, the taste of something old coming up. Turns out we've been running the longest childhood experiment in the history of life on earth. Neanderthal babies were built like toddlers at six months. We stayed helpless longer than any species had any business staying helpless. And somehow that was the bet that worked. The slow ones inherited the earth. The research is fresh. A skeleton called Amud 7, found in Israel, six months old at death, body the size of a modern human toddler twice its age. Checked against two other Neanderthal children from Syria and France — same pattern every time. Faster body growth, faster brain growth, greater energy expenditure. Built for a world that would kill you if you weren't ready. Small bodies lose heat fast. Neanderthals needed mass quickly or they died....

What EC Knows

  A case study in what language models miss There is a place called EC. Not on any map. Not in any encyclopedia. Not in the Wikipedia article about East Cleveland , which mentions Millionaire’s Row, the historic Nela Park, and the median household income of $22,883. EC doesn’t appear there. It doesn’t appear in the Case Western encyclopedia of Cleveland history either, or in the tourism guides, or in the civic databases. EC is what everybody in the schools calls it. It’s what you call it when you’re from there, or when you’ve worked there long enough to be trusted with the name. It lives in hallways. In the way a kid says where they’re from. In the mouths of teachers who actually showed up. This week, historian Ada Palmer and cryptographer Bruce Schneier published a piece in The Guardian arguing that large language models have a fundamental blind spot: trained almost entirely on written text, they learned language at its most formal, edited, and archived—and missed the vas...

Still, Again

 Peter Putnam believed the mind’s fundamental goal wasn’t to solve problems or pursue pleasure, but simply to repeat itself. Not in the mechanical sense, but existentially—to restore its own pattern after disruption. In his unpublished theory of mind, he imagined a system that, when perturbed by the environment, learns to act on that environment in such a way that it gets perturbed back into its original state. Repetition wasn’t just survival—it was identity maintenance. It was being. Sleep clarifies this model. We do not have a satisfactory explanation for why conscious experience suspends during sleep rather than simply dimming. The brain remains active—consolidating memory, clearing metabolic waste, cycling through distinct states—and yet experience appears to go away. Not gradually, not in any way we can track, but as a break. Whatever we mean by “self” does not persist through that interval in any accessible sense. And still, something returns. If Putnam is right that the s...

We All Start the Same: An Invitation to Speculate

Every human embryo begins from a shared developmental template. What we call male and female differentiate from the same tissue, triggered by hormonal signals arriving later in development. The clitoris and penis diverge from the same structure. The labia and scrotum from the same folds. The prostate and Skene's glands, mirrored along the same plan. We all begin the same. We do not begin in the same place. From that foundation the questions multiply and the research largely disappears. Menopause — a transition every woman who lives long enough will experience — remains remarkably understudied. The full anatomical structure of the clitoris was not mapped until 2005. The detailed 3D nerve map was published in March 2026 — weeks ago — decades after equivalent mapping was completed for male anatomy. The hormonal complexity of the female lifespan across reproduction, perimenopause, and beyond is poorly understood relative to its universality. A universal transition, minimally studied. A...

The Raft and the Rock

Democracy, Capital, Faith, and the Question of What Remains “A democracy is a raft which would never sink, but then your feet are always in the water.” — Fisher Ames, 1788 I. The Raft Fisher Ames, in 1788, gave American political thought one of its most durable images. A monarchy, he said, is a merchantman—well-built, efficient, impressive in the harbor. But it sometimes strikes a rock and goes to the bottom. A democracy is a raft, which will never sink, but your feet are always in the water. The image was later extended: the dictatorship is the proud ship that strikes something hidden beneath the surface and founders. The raft gets tossed around badly, feet permanently wet, passengers arguing about which direction to paddle. But it gets to shore. The raft works because it is made of the same material as the water. It has give. It loses pieces and gains pieces. It reconfigures around obstacles because it was never rigid to begin with. The people on it built it themselves from whatever ...

The AI Race and the End-of-History

How triumphalist thinking makes civilizational risk harder to address In 1992, Francis Fukuyama declared that liberal democracy represented the endpoint of humanity’s ideological evolution. History, in the Hegelian sense, was over. What followed was not the peaceful administration of a settled world but a series of catastrophic surprises — the attacks of September 11 , the 2008 global financial crisis , and the resurgence of authoritarian nationalism across multiple regions. The confidence of the claim had produced a kind of civilizational blindness. We may be living through a remarkably similar moment. The current race to build advanced artificial intelligence is often described as a commercial competition or a national security contest. At its deepest level, however, it is being conducted as something more ambitious: a bid to win history itself. The implicit assumption underneath the racing behavior — the tolerance for existential risk, the dismissal of regulatory friction, the ...